The left twists and turns after Joe Biden’s debate debacle



Diary of disturbing disinformation and dangerous delusions

President Biden’s catastrophic debate performance revealed to the world the sorry state of his cognitive decline, putting Democrats and their media sock puppets in a jam.

Some of them are now forced to admit what they’ve long denied about his mental condition; others are still gaslighting about it.

And some still feel the need to defend him, since he’s continuing his bid for reelection, even though they now privately believe he should quit.

The result: a pattern of absurd and contradictory statements that show the left’s pretzel-twisting contortions as they try to bend with the political realities of the day.

Here’s a small sample:


Spot the difference:

“The president’s very sharp. . . . He’s on top of everything.”

— MSNBC’S Joe Scarborough, pre-debate

vs.

“He spent much of the night with his mouth agape and his eyes darting back and forth . . . . Democrats [must] decide whether this man . . .  is up to the task of running for president.”

Scarborough, post-debate

MSNBC host Mika Brzezinski said that it would be a mistake to count Biden out after the debate. Morning Joe/MSNBC

vs.

“I’ve learned that counting him out is always a mistake and doing that now could be catastrophic for our country.”

Scarborough’s wife, MSNBC’s Mika Brzezinski, the next Monday, after a campaign spokesperson insisted Biden would not drop out of the race


Spot the difference:

“Memory Loss Requires Diagnosis, Scientists Say”

— New York Times news story, pre-debate

and:

“Then there is the distorted, online version of [Biden], a product of often misleading videos that play into and reinforce voters’ longstanding concerns about his age and abilities.”

— New York Times news story, pre-debate

vs.

“To Serve His Country, President Biden Should Leave Race”

New York Times editorial, post-debate


This claim:

“I haven’t heard a single person express anything negative.”

Rep. Jim Clyburn, Biden campaign co-chairman, on the post-debate response from “people on the ground”

Rep. Jim Clyburn claimed that he hasn’t heard anything negative from “people on the ground” following the debate. CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Spot the difference:

“[Biden is as] sharp as a tack.”

— Washington Post columnist Eugene Robinson, pre-debate

vs.

“Biden’s 2024 survival requires a lot more than hope.”

Robinson, post-debate


This report:

“All the other elected officials I’ve talked to . . . have confidence in Joe Biden. They think he’s our strongest candidate.”

Biden campaign co-chairman Sen. Chris Coons, post-debate


Spot the difference:

“Seeing is believing? Not necessarily when it comes to video clips of Biden and Trump”

Washington Post headline, June 21

vs.

“Why Biden didn’t accept the truth that was there for all to see”

— Washington Post’s David Ignatius, Friday


This spin:

“The reality is the race has not fundamentally changed.”

— Former Biden flack Kate Bedingfield


Spot the difference:

“[Biden is] very lucid . . .  well-informed.”

— NY Times columnist Paul Krugman, pre-debate

vs.

“[Biden] needs to withdraw.”

— Krugman, post-debate.


This comment:

“[Biden] has the stamina . . . There are health-care professionals who think that Trump has dementia.”

Rep. Nancy Pelosi, post-debate

Rep. Nancy Pelosi suggested that Trump has dementia after the debate. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Spot the difference:

“Watch me.”

— Biden, pre-debate, responding to those questioning his fitness for reelection.

vs.

“I don’t debate as well as I used to.”

— Biden, post-debate

Compiled by The Post Editorial Board



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